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Wavepad float
Wavepad float









wavepad float

In my 80-90 hours of recording there has never been a problem. RuthieG wrote:I have absolutely no idea what 32 bit float means, but it's the default setting in an Audacity preference that I have never even looked at, and that's what I have always used. Here's a wikipedia article on pcm but it makes my head hurt but if you're interested: So to answer the question you actually asked, I don't see why there would be a problem using 32. So for editing purposes it's theoretically a good thing, though I'm not sure how noticeable the difference is in a practical sense. Floating is better than not floating because of math things (float uses decimal places instead of rounding.) So basically if you perform some some sort of process or effect on 32 bit float you will lose less of the audio (do less damage) than if you do the same thing to a 16 bit. My best advice would be to back off the mic and amplify after.

wavepad float

Unfortunately, I don't know why, I've been working on the problem though haven't come up with anything yet. The difference is I have to put my mouth to the mic and scream to make it clip but the biggest the waveform ever gets is about. I actually have something similar happening with my new mic set up. I haven't seen this happen before, and I can find no way to change the clip level.











Wavepad float